Thursday, May 05, 2022

U.S. advanced telecom policy has produced highly fragmented infrastructure, wide access disparities

Before the National Broadband Plan, policy groups did not truly work together to create broadband implementation strategy, Baller said. The project in which he was involved helped establish that a national unified plan for expansion was necessary in order for internet access to actually increase.Groups did not “think how their interests and others worked together,” he said.
 
This unified approach still impacts the strategy behind implementation today of Congress’ 2021 bipartisan infrastructure bill, the Infrastructure Investment and Jobs Act. Further, his experiences consulting with Google’s Fiber for Communities project influenced how he has approached his work to ensure implementation of the bipartisan infrastructure bill.
 
The goal is to maximize the effect to close the digital divide. And the tool to do that, according to Baller, is to focus on local broadband deployments: Look at where incumbents lagging in their efforts to deploy higher capacity broadband.
 
 
This assessment is way off the mark. The U.S. Federal Communications Commission's National Broadband Plan issued in 2010 hasn't produced a unified national approach to modernizing the nation's outdated copper-based telecommunications delivery infrastructure to fiber. Instead, it's highly fragmented with only about a third of all homes with access to fiber connections from a mix of investor-owned, utility cooperative and government owned infrastructure. In many areas, stopgap wireless technologies have been employed to fill the gaps. Nor does the Infrastructure Investment and Jobs Act (IIJA) set a unified national approach or infrastructure standard, instead allocating grants to the states based on the degree to which they fall short of an arbitrary minimum "broadband" throughput.
 
The local municipal focus advocated here has accentuated the fragmentation, with policymakers making patchwork efforts to increase "broadband throughput" instead of regarding advanced telecommunications infrastructure more widely in a regional and interstate context as universal telephone service was before it.

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